\title{Book reviews} \author[Malcolm Clark]{Malcolm Clark\\\texttt{m.clark@warwick.ac.uk}} \begin{Article} \subsection{Writing \& Illuminating \& Lettering, by Edward Johnston} This is an interesting book, not least since it is said to have been continuously in print since 1906. My edition is from 1946 (published by Pitman), but I note that it is now available from A\&C Black. In essence this is an account of Calligraphy. What has this to do with printing, you may ask? A number of typographers would argue that calligraphic skills are a necessary prerequisite for the adequate understanding of type. But more than this, I have a soft spot for Johnston. He taught at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, alongside Eric Gill (who had been his pupil, and with whom he later shared rooms). Johnston went on to create the typeface which was used by London Underground\footnote{at this point I have to say `Frank Pick'. Frank Pick was the driving force behind the corporate identity of London Underground, all those years ago -- a corporate identity which has, up to now, managed to survive.}, and in a digital form still is used by them. Gill of course created {\em Gill Sans} (among others), which bears some similarities (well, it's a sans serif) to {\em Johnston}. The similarity was great enough to lead one correspondent on {\tt comp.fonts} to consider {\em Johnston} a derivative of {\em Gill Sans}. Neither are derivatives of the other, but stemmed from some common beliefs and skills. The really interesting thing is that Johnston was a calligrapher, while Gill was a stone cutter. The requirements of the two crafts are rather different -- and different again from type. {\em Johnston} was intended as a `signing' face: it was not intended for continuous text (unlike {\em Gill Sans}). I have however seen the modern variant ({\em New Johnston}) which was redesigned by Banks\&Miles used for continuous text. It works up to a point. Of course other signing fonts have become used for continuous text -- most notably Helvetica (designed for signs at Swiss airports). Obviously the book is primarily about hand lettering: Johnston was writing to encapsulate the craft, and to encourage others to develop their skills. It is therefore a rather detailed manual which leads you through all the practical aspects of the craft. There is an underlying theme, which may be made explicit from this quote: `The first general virtue of lettering is {\sl readableness}, the second, {\em fitness} for a given Use.' Almost everything else stems from this belief. Given our concern with typography it is arresting to read that `to arrange letters well requires no great art, but it requires a working knowledge of letter-forms and of the reasonable methods of grouping those forms'. So there. Given the title, which included `illuminating' it is hardly surprising that Johnston includes the use of colour. Traditionally, rubrication (\ie `adding of `Red, or other coloured letters\dots to a MS.~or Book') was used for title pages, for prefaces and notes, for headings of columns and pages, for initials, marking stanzas, colophons, and so on. Johnston seems to have had an especial liking for gold, either matt or burnished. This is one feature which is unlikely to transfer to electronic publications. Elsewhere he notes `use a limited number of pure, bright colours'. It may also be interesting that Johnston is quite happy to `letter-space' in some circumstances, although the example he gives is upper case and he makes no obvious linking to letter spacing lower case. It is an interesting read: it is very practical and straightforward. He advises, recommends, but seldom pontificates. He makes it all so reasonable that I might just sign up for a calligraphy class next term. Copies may be obtained from Typobooks, {\sc freepost}, Colchester, Essex CO3~4JH, for a mere \pounds14.99. This new edition has the advantage that the plates have been re-originated. Those in my copy lack definition. \subsection{Modern Typography, by Robin Kinross} This is a rather fine volume. It discusses the history of typography since `Modern' times. That is, since about 1700. This is essentially the same meaning for `modern' as is found in `Computer Modern'. Kinross chooses this date since it is around then that there emerges a `readiness to articulate knowledge and consciousness' (of printing). The book will not tell you how to create typography. What it discusses are the influences which created the movements in typography. It does so in a considered and careful way which was dismissed as `dry' by one {\tt comp.fonts} correspondent; on the other hand, I found it erudite and entertaining. Kinross describes it as `typographic history', a field he criticizes in general for its absence of historical skills, superficial notions of design, and ritual statements of admiration or distaste. He also notes that much previous work along these lines (citing Stanley Morison) has made the assumption that all typography is book typography. Adopting this iconoclastic approach, he gives short shrift to, for example, Baskerville, Bodoni, the Bauhaus, the more precious private presses and `fine printing'. As he wends his way from Moxton to the present day, he throws some light on one of the ironies of rationality: the standardisation of the point system predated metrication by only a few years, and a proposal to create a metric point (from Firmin Didot) failed to be accepted. It is also to France that the origin of paper sizes in the ratio $1\colon\sqrt2$ belongs, although this did not achieve prominence until it was adopted in Germany early this century. Kinross has little time for the argument that greater mechanization in printing led to a decline in standards. On the contrary, he argues that `standards of press-work only improved with powered printing'. We are taken through a well-documented account of printing in England from the times of William Morris, and similarly shown the influences which crossed the Atlantic, as well as the more or less autonomous developments taking place in the United States. In the early years of this century, German typography was a force to be reckoned with. Within it were debates which hardly affected the english-speaking world, notably that of the place of `blackletter'. Kinross summarises this crudely (his own term) as `to prefer roman over blackletter was to be modern\dots to prefer sanserif roman letters to those with serifs was to be more modern still'. His background references and discussion shows how much more complex the question was, placing the debate firmly in its political and social context. It is perhaps with the `new typography' that Kinross is at his most excited. This `movement' is most clearly given form by Jan Tschichold's {\em Die neue Typographie} published in 1928. Kinross links back to a statement by Lissitzky in 1923 which might be felt to be prophetic: `The printed surface transcends space and time. The printed surface, the infinity of books, must be transcended. The electro-library.' Make of that what we will. Perhaps the strongest principle of this new typography was that it was related to purpose; this therefore helped determine the details of the designed object, as well as placing it in its wider context. It is intriguing that one consequence of this new typography was `the cult of spiral binding', as well as a tendency towards unjustified setting -- `more proper to machine composition'. In the midst of this Kinross deals with the Bauhaus, pointing out that there were never any fully-fledged typographers there. Later he goes on to suggest that the reputation of the Bauhaus rested for many years on the exhibition about it held in New York in 1938, accompanied by the book accompanying the show. In a sense the Bauhaus reinterpreted itself, at a time when it could be seen as another symbol of hope crushed under the heel of the oppressive dictator. After the war came the rise or identification of `Swiss typography'. One element of this was the application of `the grid' (possibly partly a result of the need to accommodate the three official Swiss languages -- they could be fairly conveniently given three columns on the grid: another consequence was the tendency to produce square formats). One interesting feature of Kinross's book is the extent to which he reveals the internal tensions within the typographic world: tensions which are seldom evident from the outside. Developments do not end here, and in his final chapter Kinross does touch on digital processes, even going so far as to spend some time on \MF, and more significantly, on PostScript. Post-modernism does appear, but curiously, its practitioners are not named: I had rather expected to see something about Spiekermann and Brody, or at least Emigre, but although clearly quite aware of them, he remains relatively silent. However, an example of Spiekermann's work does appear in the illustrations. The thirty or so illustrations enlarge and expand the text, and often represent items other\-wise hard to find (for example a German book of 1935 where blackletter text is printed in a surprisingly `modern' form). The form of the book is itself interesting. Each page has a wide left margin and is set ragged right. I was surprised how comfortable I found this. The wide margin is used for `footnotes'. There is very little use of type differentiation to denote special features. In fact, each section starts with a heading in the body type, but offset by 20 pt or so (and a bigskip). Running heads are in small capitals. I think I object to the running heads being set to the right on each page, since they include the page number. I really don't find page numbers next to the binding edge very useful. Footnotes are in a slightly smaller face, while chapter titles are slightly larger than the body type. Apart from that, the only variation is in the occasional use of italic. This is nicely minimalist. It echoes Richard Southall's short article many years ago in \TUB\ 5(2), `{\em First principles of typographic design for document production}'. It will come as no great surprise that Kinross also came through Reading University's Department of Typography. This is a book I will recommend. I felt much better informed from having read it, with a better understanding of the movements in typography, and a better feeling for their limitations. Although it does concentrate mainly on `bookish' matters to the exclusion of the world of magazines, newspapers and journals, it does provide useful insights and provoking conclusions. It is published by Hyphen Press at about \pounds15. \end{Article} \endinput